Esme

I am sitting here going through sections of our website, and I come to my blog drafts page. Imagine my surprise to find this post that I thought I had published in 2014!

Enjoy these lamb pics while we wait patiently until April when this year’s lambs will be born.

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In 2014 we were blessed with 10 healthy lambs! 6 ewe lambs and 4 ram lambs; 3 sets of twins and 4 singles. Our lambing season began on February 28th and lasted till March 9th (when we had 2 sets of twins born).

Because of the extreme cold weather that winter and the icy conditions we kept the ewes and lambs in the barn until the ice melted and the youngest lambs were a couple weeks old.

It was great to watch them enjoy their new-found freedom when we finally were able to bring them outside.

They had been outside for a couple weeks and were racing a few times every day. I don’t think I’ll ever get tired of watching them!

… and most people will tell you that a watched ewe won’t lamb either. Our first 4 lambs were born pretty close together. Saturday (3/2) through Monday (3/4). You can read their story here. Twins, Beatrice and Bertha were the next 2 ewes to lamb, and they did so within 18 hours of each other!

Beatrice had her single ewe lamb close to midnight, Tuesday night (3/5). Everything went well. We woke up to baby-lamb baas over the baby monitor sometime before 1am and I went out to the barn. The lamb was already standing and nursing so I decided it could stay with Beatrice in the big stall until the morning when I was more awake. I dipped the lambs navel and weighed her (9.25 lbs), then went back to bed.

Wednesday afternoon (3/6), we had a pediatrician appointment after school and got home around 4:30 to Bertha cleaning off twin ram lambs! I got out to the barn quickly to make sure both were nursing, and to weigh them. The older one was 8.75 lbs and was lighter in color; his darker twin was 9.5 lbs. Since I still had to get ready to leave for work, I hurried back to the house and Dave took care of moving Bertha and the twins to the lambing jug.

The first 5 ewes to lamb were 4 sisters and 1 daughter. I’ve heard that related ewes go into heat around the same time … I wonder if that is true.

Thursday and Friday didn’t bring any lambs, but Esme had a single ram lamb (10.75 lbs) early Saturday morning (3/9). We got out to the barn around 1:50am and got her and her lamb to the jug. This is her first lambing and she did very well. Esme seemed a little nervous about her lamb nursing but quickly settled down and we were back in the house in just a half-hour.

We’ve past the last possible lambing date from the ewes being exposed to the ram lambs and Camille is still definitely pregnant. We’ve estimated that she will probably not have her lamb(s) until at least 3/30 since after being exposed to the ram lambs, she was exposed to our ram, Ezra beginning on 11/1/12.

We have bred our sheep and had successful lambing seasons for 6 years. This fall breeding season, however, turned out to be a learning experience for us.

Usually at 3 months our lambs are separated from their dams for weaning. After 2-3 weeks we move the ewe lambs back to the pasture with the adult ewes. The ram lambs go in the pasture with our adult rams and wethers. For some reason (I can’t remember why right now), we let ALL the lambs go back to the pasture with their dams for the summer.

On October 13th, we took all the ram lambs away from the ewes because we saw some *frisky* behavior going on. We had decided to put our rams in with the ewes in early November so that we wouldn’t have lambs until April. We separated our rams so that Ezra and Camille we together in one field (Camille is our only ewe that Ezra is not related to), and Raulie was with Annie, Abigail, Bertha, Beatrice, Erin and Esme. We put all the lambs in a 3rd field with our wether BFL and goat.

{Some background info on sheep breeding… We put breeding harnesses that hold crayons on our rams each breeding season. When the ram mounts the ewe the crayon on the harness rubs on her rump. We then have visual evidence of breeding and can mark our calendar accordingly so we can calculate when any lambs will be born. Sheep cycle ever 14-18 days, therefore, you should change the color crayon in your ram’s breeding harness every 14-15 days. If a ewe is marked with the second color, this means she did not conceive during the 1st cycle. Any ewe that did conceive in the 1st cycle will not cycle again and the ram will not have any interest in mounting her.}

After 2 weeks of rams and ewes together, not one of the ewes was marked with color on their rump. We usually breed in October, I started to wonder if we missed our window of opportunity, but I didn’t really think that was the case because we have had rams breed ewes though December. Since none of the girls were marked, I didn’t bother changing crayon colors for their next cycle. Two more weeks with nothing, and during that time I started thinking that we left the ram lambs in with their dams too long because the adult rams were not mounting the ewes at all. You’ll remember that we did see some frisky behavior earlier in the fall, but we didn’t witness any actual breeding.

Now that we’re in the New Year, we are anticipating a surprising lambing season because we think our ewes are pregnant, but we don’t have any idea when they are due. We guess that any lambs will be born BEFORE mid-March since we took the ram lambs away from the ewes in mid-October. Unfortunately this lamb crop will not be able to be registered, but we will look forward to the lambs anyway!!